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by ffsm8
512 days ago
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While youre touching on a real issue, your phrasing doesn't really convey you've understood the issue you're touching on, honestly. What you're actually putting forth is wherever large social media platforms should be treated as utilities. (Which ISPs are). If the legislative decided to categorize it as a utility, then any censorship the company decided to do could potentially infringe on your free speech, yes. However, this is not the case as of today. If it's deemed as such, it'd definitely have a global effect. Wherever that'd be positive would be an interesting case study. And I might add: lots of ISPs host DNS servers which do in fact censor / block certain domains from resolving |
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I've understood it very well, I find it very funny that people which say stuff like Google is a private company and should do what it wants are the same people which say Google should respect net-neutrality (peering agreements, ...) and not do what it wants when it's about core networking and not social media.